The AEGIS data link format is likely a USN work product.
I can't imagine any reason to publish details of the format.
It's a complicated story. According to the NFM-200, many ordnances (Harpoon, HARM, JSOW, Mk 82, Paveway) produce higher drag on the Rhino, especially considering the interference drags with multiple stores.They are causing unnecessary drag resulting reduction of the Super Hornet's range.
Full pdf:That seems weird…that leaves the A2A missile as largely or completely subsonic if it is an hour long flight time. Though nothing in that graphic actually indicates flight time; not sure where the one hour figure comes from. It is interesting that B-1 is depicted as the shooter.
That seems weird…that leaves the A2A missile as largely or completely subsonic if it is an hour long flight time. Though nothing in that graphic actually indicates flight time; not sure where the one hour figure comes from. It is interesting that B-1 is depicted as the shooter.
Hmm most 'Wild West' gunslingers in reality shot their opponent in the back from less than 20ft.
AIM-174 Standard AAM (to go with AGM-78 Standard ARM).AIM-174 Gunslinger, I like that name.
AIM-174 Standard AAM (to go with AGM-78 Standard ARM).
Once GMTI satellites have full coverage every A2G missile will be an ARM.It occurred to me that if the USN wanted to create an AARGM-LR they could stick the AGM-88E GCU, warhead and fuse into the front end of an AIM-174B (So AGM-174C?).
Once GMTI satellites have full coverage every A2G missile will be an ARM.
Most modern Missiles have inbuilt multiband receivers for data links, both the AIM9 and 120 has such as well as the SM6, so be shock if the Aim174 doesn't.
You don't need broadband antiradiation seekers if you have the equivalent of the JDAM guidance program.Datalinks aren't the same as broadband anti-radiation seekers.
Once GMTI satellites have full coverage every A2G missile will be an ARM.
I edit wikipedia pages all the time but nobody ever reaches out to me with insider informationHowdy; I'm the author of the Wikipedia page for the AIM-174B. A couple of... shall we say, "concerned parties" reached-out to me and advised me that the name is not "Gunslinger."
Trying to change it at this point may put you between a Roc and a hard place.I would have preferred "Phoenix II" or perhaps another mythological bird.
To be fair, it was on Reddit, technically. r/WarCollege — I mentioned I was the author and a couple of naval aviators reached-out to me.I edit wikipedia pages all the time but nobody ever reaches out to me with insider information![]()
100%. The secondary sources took to it quite quickly.Trying to change it at this point may put you between a Roc and a hard place.
Personally, I think it's a cool name, though I would have preferred "Phoenix II"
Reminds me of that G@vin nonsense.Trying to change it at this point may put you between a Roc and a hard place.
The problem these days is that not only do secondary sources muddy the waters for people who kinda know what they are looking for; they swamp the AIs with hits such that one person making something up, in the absence of any clear source refuting it, because part of the LLM. I am willing to bet you could convince an AI of all kinds of modest factual alterations if they were subtle enough to pass the smell test of amateurs while being “newsworthy” enough to get picked up by lots of secondary sources (which themselves maybe AIs). It probably would not work for established facts like the diameter of the moon, but for anything not already explicitly defined, one could probably fill the space with any semi reasonable value or datum one wanted, with enough effort.100%. The secondary sources took to it quite quickly.
The current generation of LLMs are absolute trash when it comes to things like this. I asked Bing AI to find me sources for something. It returned with several that I had never been able to find, despite years of searching. I looked at them; Turns-out, they were COMPLETELY fabricated. Straight-up just made them up. Several, not just one. Wild.The problem these days is that not only do secondary sources muddy the waters for people who kinda know what they are looking for; they swamp the AIs with hits such that one person making something up, in the absence of any clear source refuting it, because part of the LLM. I am willing to bet you could convince an AI of all kinds of modest factual alterations if they were subtle enough to pass the smell test of amateurs while being “newsworthy” enough to get picked up by lots of secondary sources (which themselves maybe AIs). It probably would not work for established facts like the diameter of the moon, but for anything not already explicitly defined, one could probably fill the space with any semi reasonable value or datum one wanted, with enough effort.
The current generation of LLMs are absolute trash when it comes to things like this. I asked Bing AI to find me sources for something. It returned with several that I had never been able to find, despite years of searching. I looked at them; Turns-out, they were COMPLETELY fabricated. Straight-up just made them up. Several, not just one. Wild.
When confronted, it stated it was "illustrating" what would be "appropriate" sources and the made-up sources were simply "placeholders" despite giving me zero indication this was the case in its initial response. See attached screenshots.
LLMs, like search engines, do not curate or validate the quality of their sources.
They also cannot smell baloney
It's important to realise AI LLMs are essentially just predictive text with all the restrictions turned off, not any kind of intelligent thought. You wanted references, so it gave you some. It doesn't care whether they exist or not, just that it answered your query.I asked Bing AI to find me sources for something. It returned with several that I had never been able to find, despite years of searching. I looked at them; Turns-out, they were COMPLETELY fabricated. Straight-up just made them up. Several, not just one. Wild.